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Woody elements benefit bird diversity to a larger extent than semi-natural grasslands in cereal-dominated landscapes

Tschumi, Matthias LU ; Birkhofer, Klaus LU ; Blasiusson, Sandra ; Jörgensen, Martin ; Smith, Henrik G. LU and Ekroos, Johan LU (2020) In Basic and Applied Ecology 46. p.15-23
Abstract

Increasing landscape complexity can mitigate negative effects of agricultural intensification on biodiversity by offering resources complementary to those provided in arable fields. In particular, grazed semi-natural grasslands and woody elements support farmland birds, but little is known about their relative effects on bird diversity and community composition. In addition, the relative importance of local habitat versus landscape composition remains unclear. We investigated how the presence of semi-natural grasslands, the number of woody elements and the composition of the wider agricultural landscape affect bird species richness, true diversity (exponential Shannon diversity) and species composition. Bird communities were surveyed... (More)

Increasing landscape complexity can mitigate negative effects of agricultural intensification on biodiversity by offering resources complementary to those provided in arable fields. In particular, grazed semi-natural grasslands and woody elements support farmland birds, but little is known about their relative effects on bird diversity and community composition. In addition, the relative importance of local habitat versus landscape composition remains unclear. We investigated how the presence of semi-natural grasslands, the number of woody elements and the composition of the wider agricultural landscape affect bird species richness, true diversity (exponential Shannon diversity) and species composition. Bird communities were surveyed four times on 16 paired transects of 250 m each with 8 transects placed between a crop field and a semi-natural grassland and 8 transects between two crop fields with no semi-natural grasslands in the vicinity. The number of woody elements around transects was selected as an important predictor in all models, having a positive effect on species richness and true diversity, while the local presence of semi-natural grasslands was not selected in the best models. However, species richness and true diversity increased with increasing cover of ley and semi-natural grasslands, whereas species composition was modified by the coverage of winter wheat at the landscape scale. Furthermore, bird species richness, true diversity and species composition differed between sampling dates. As bird diversity benefited from woody elements, rather than from the local presence of semi-natural grasslands as such, it is important to maintain woody structures in farmland. However, the positive effect of grassland at the landscape scale highlights the importance of habitat variability at multiple scales. Because species richness and true diversity were affected by different landscape components compared to species composition, a mosaic of land-use types is needed to achieve multiple conservation goals across agricultural landscapes.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Agri-environment schemes, Biodiversity conservation, Common Agricultural Policy, Landscape simplification, Pastures, Tree density
in
Basic and Applied Ecology
volume
46
pages
9 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85085966823
ISSN
1439-1791
DOI
10.1016/j.baae.2020.03.005
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0dffed8a-9e3d-45b6-82c9-ead0a7e7b0e7
date added to LUP
2020-07-01 13:02:29
date last changed
2024-05-01 12:37:52
@article{0dffed8a-9e3d-45b6-82c9-ead0a7e7b0e7,
  abstract     = {{<p>Increasing landscape complexity can mitigate negative effects of agricultural intensification on biodiversity by offering resources complementary to those provided in arable fields. In particular, grazed semi-natural grasslands and woody elements support farmland birds, but little is known about their relative effects on bird diversity and community composition. In addition, the relative importance of local habitat versus landscape composition remains unclear. We investigated how the presence of semi-natural grasslands, the number of woody elements and the composition of the wider agricultural landscape affect bird species richness, true diversity (exponential Shannon diversity) and species composition. Bird communities were surveyed four times on 16 paired transects of 250 m each with 8 transects placed between a crop field and a semi-natural grassland and 8 transects between two crop fields with no semi-natural grasslands in the vicinity. The number of woody elements around transects was selected as an important predictor in all models, having a positive effect on species richness and true diversity, while the local presence of semi-natural grasslands was not selected in the best models. However, species richness and true diversity increased with increasing cover of ley and semi-natural grasslands, whereas species composition was modified by the coverage of winter wheat at the landscape scale. Furthermore, bird species richness, true diversity and species composition differed between sampling dates. As bird diversity benefited from woody elements, rather than from the local presence of semi-natural grasslands as such, it is important to maintain woody structures in farmland. However, the positive effect of grassland at the landscape scale highlights the importance of habitat variability at multiple scales. Because species richness and true diversity were affected by different landscape components compared to species composition, a mosaic of land-use types is needed to achieve multiple conservation goals across agricultural landscapes.</p>}},
  author       = {{Tschumi, Matthias and Birkhofer, Klaus and Blasiusson, Sandra and Jörgensen, Martin and Smith, Henrik G. and Ekroos, Johan}},
  issn         = {{1439-1791}},
  keywords     = {{Agri-environment schemes; Biodiversity conservation; Common Agricultural Policy; Landscape simplification; Pastures; Tree density}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{15--23}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Basic and Applied Ecology}},
  title        = {{Woody elements benefit bird diversity to a larger extent than semi-natural grasslands in cereal-dominated landscapes}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2020.03.005}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.baae.2020.03.005}},
  volume       = {{46}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}